USA TODAY US Edition

ONE DIRECTION STANDOUT GOES SOLO

Harry Styles is ‘the most honest’ he’s been in debut album

- Maeve McDermott @maeve_mcdermott USA TODAY

Promoting a new album is hard work, and for Harry Styles, that work involves gamely commenting on One Direction fan-fiction theories.

“Oh, is that a thing?” he said, amused by the fan theory that his new song Sweet Creature was inspired by 1D bandmate Louis Tomlinson. “Well, whatever it is that it makes one feel. But I think if you listen to the lyrics, you can work out what it’s about.”

Styles’ charming, Britishacc­ented modesty aside, the 23-year-old One Direction singer is poised to become one of the world’s biggest pop stars with the release of his selftitled debut album, out Friday, a collection of music that Styles describes as “songs about stories, and another group of songs delving into,

‘Why did I feel like that.’ ” His first single, Sign of the

Times, was a biblically-epic debut, drawing comparison­s to David Bowie and Elton John, a logical progressio­n from the classic-rock nostalgia heard on One Direction’s final two albums. Yet Styles, and his similarly-aged fans, grew up in an era of music where genre distinctio­ns have melted together, and his album spends just as much time dabbling in twangy folk and modern alt-pop as in the stadium rock of his former band.

“I was very much working out what I wanted the album to be up until picking the track listing, and I wanted people to go through that with me when listening to that, instead of picking a sound and writing 10 of the same things,” he said.

And when he does name-drop an icon, he opts for a figure known more for his classic songwritin­g than sheer star power. “I listened to a lot of Harry Nilsson while making the album,” he said. “His lyrics are honest, and so good, and I think it’s because he’s never trying to sound clever.”

Making the album was “like therapy” for Styles, who explained, “It’s so much easier saying something to an instrument than it is to a person.” And time and again when talking about his music, Styles returns to this theme of honesty, which he saw as less of a goal on his album and more a responsibi­lity. “I really didn’t want to be editing lyrics and pulling stuff out,” he said. “I kind of decided early on, that every time I said to myself, ‘ Can I say this?’ I wanted to say yes. ”

As a result, Harry Styles is packed with flashbacks, with references to wild nights and inside jokes that seem coded for the people who inspired the tracks to hear. Styles has been the subject of these kinds of songs, his fans sleuthing out clues in lyrics from his former fling Taylor Swift. However, unlike Swift’s coy admissions about her inspiratio­ns, Styles declines to drop any hints.

“I’ve never really felt like I’ve had to explain my personal life,” he said. “And I love that with writing, you get to wrap it up with a song. I understand that people will dissect stuff like that, which is amazing, that people care enough about you to try and figure out what it means.”

That includes Sweet Creature. “The fun thing is, you can write a love song that’s not always in the traditiona­l sense — it doesn’t always have to be romantic or even about a person at all, if you don’t want,” he said. And Harry Styles’ most nontraditi­onal love story happens to be its best. Among the many other young songwriter­s to claim Nilsson as an influence was Elliott Smith, whose achingly intimate acoustic melodies are an unmistakab­le influence on Harry Styles’ final song From the Dining Table, which opens with, “Woke up alone in this hotel room, played with myself where were you / Fell back asleep, got drunk by noon, I’ve never felt less cool.”

“I’d say it’s the most honest I’ve been, I’ve never written and recorded a song like that,” Styles said about the track, which “came at a time when any barrier of editing myself had been stripped away. I never do anything while listening to it, it’s a song that makes me stop and listen rather than doing something and having it on in the background.”

Yet, Styles chooses his words carefully when asked whether the song, a lonely snapshot of a drunk kid in a hotel room, is a comment on fame, saying he has “no complaints” about his life. As always, he knows the world is listening.

“I feel very lucky to be able to travel and play music and work in music,” he said. “But for me, my favorite artists’ songs aren’t the ones where they’re talking about how great their life is, they’re not the stories you want to hear. You want to know why they chose to be alone somewhere, I think that’s the stuff that makes you feel something. (That’s) way more interestin­g than them telling me they had champagne for dinner.”

“I understand that people will dissect stuff like that, which is amazing, that people care enough to try and figure out what it means.” Harry Styles on revealing his personal life in song.

 ?? JAMES MEDINA ?? Harry Styles’ self-titled album is out Friday.
JAMES MEDINA Harry Styles’ self-titled album is out Friday.
 ?? CHARLES SYKES, INVISION/AP ??
CHARLES SYKES, INVISION/AP
 ??  ??
 ?? MIKE COPPOLA, GETTY IMAGES ??
MIKE COPPOLA, GETTY IMAGES
 ?? WILL HEATH, NBC ?? Harry Styles performs Sign of the Times on Saturday Night Live last month.
WILL HEATH, NBC Harry Styles performs Sign of the Times on Saturday Night Live last month.
 ?? FILE PHOTO BY CHRIS PIZZELLO, AP ?? One Direction — Louis Tomlinson, left, Liam Payne, Styles, Zayn Malik and Niall Horan — was all the rage in 2012.
FILE PHOTO BY CHRIS PIZZELLO, AP One Direction — Louis Tomlinson, left, Liam Payne, Styles, Zayn Malik and Niall Horan — was all the rage in 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States